THE NEW YORK PRESS. EDITORIAL OPINION OF TUB LRAftlfid JOURNALS OPOM CtTBRRNT TOPICS OOMPILKD KVKKT PAT FOB THK BVKN1NO TRLKORAPU. Oar Indian Policy. From the Tribune. If we are at a Iowa to determine whether we are at war or not, we may rest assured that Ihe Indians are still more so. Those (ieneral Jlancock met lately had no desire to fight; and that they risked something for a confer ence proves that very conclusively. They un doubtedly ventured thus into immediate proxi mity to the expedition in the hope of avert ing the storm, and the experiment has evi dently cost them some of their baggage. They had certain rights and claims as the native occupants of the soil to urge on the en- PLrtinn twonlo of the United Ihnir renresentatr t. unmimll'lll of the nterests it was their business to protect. Ihat they mot Hancock at the very gates of civilization, on the most eastern portion of their noma, he beat, is evidence of their desire to stay the band of war. , Why did they refuse to let (ieneral llanooek and his men visit the camp where their fami lies were ? Perhaps it will be recalled that at Mi Hollow, in lh.r(i, (ieneral Harney sent for the Indians "to talk." He too had gone on lttt.n &n tA Tmlinn-tirrhtflr. htt i.a th difli.-.iiltv of finding them, aud while I r him be uronosed terms that , it was impossible to expeci ineni 10 accepv, and fired on those who came to treat with him, before they could return to their men. Do we wonder that these haughty, wild Indians of the plains do not want a licentious soldiery quartered among their families ? When Gene j.d Hancock, therefore, determined to visit 1 ieir camp in the face of their protest, lie left ti.ose who thus came to him no alternative but to i-'ht or to llee. riiat they did the latter, rather than hover roi nd his outposts to pickup stragglers, is evidence that they have not yet dismissed the hope of peace. To be sure, it cost them some tents and baggage, valuable to them; but these aborigines are shrewd children of the plains. The tent poles dragging at their ponies' sides must not mark the route of their retreat. Their ponies must be burdened with do more than will enable them to pursue a rapid flight. Where have they gone ? Where, indeed, can they go ? Is this mode of treating the Indian question worthy of a great Christian nation ? Admit the difficulties that beset the problem, we still claim a great intelligence, and the ques tion has surely an honorable solution. No means can certainly be half so expensive as war. It is well known that the War Depart ment desired the burden of Indian manage ment to be added to its cares. Is it really a plan to cut the unsolved questions by the sword, and come to the next Congress with fresh reasons against a divided jurisdiction of the Indian question? These may be bard thoughts, but the circumstances suggest them. Whatever may be the purpose, we apprehend that the result will be to convince all Christian men that the army, whose trade and only trade now is war on them, is not the proper custodian of these helpless interests. Still more. The West, where all our tele graphic stations are, is in the interest hostile to Indians, which, really, would like to see them exterminated. And yet more. Near these stations, with the commercial interests, such wars and expeditions are godsends. There are hay contracts and corn contracts to let for the cavalry that go hunting for the Cheyenne trail. There are beef contracts. There is, in fact, money money everywhere in it. Do we wonder that the telegrams are so contradictory? Are we astonished that they are so bloodthirsty, and are, after all, able to give us so little evidence to be relied on of positive outrage or warlike dispositions ? There is a vague idea in the public mind that, in order to negotiate with Indians, it is best to give them a sound drubbing to begin with. This is, in fact, true of more people j than the Indians. If we wished to annex Canada, for instance, we might find it more easy after waging a successful war on Eng- I land. It is true it would be expensive, and I might cost us more, as in the Cheyenne case, than it is worth; but then, the Cheyenues and ' Sioux are weak; and a war, although expen sive, would not be difficult nor its result doubtful. There is but one thing that the army in the "West can do make the Indians willing to accept terms that we, as a Christian nation, ought not to impose on them. It is true that nothing can, or should, arrest the footsteps of civilization on the continent; but it is also true that we owe to the wild inhabitants of the country we seek to possess, all that can be done to spare, to elevate, and preserve them. The plan of peace is far less expensive than that of war. Let our Indian system cease to be a paddock in which decayed politicians feed, and the sheath to rub the rust from an idle army. God gave us our superior intelli gence; let us thank Him for it in good works. The ReconstructlouCaitealutlie supreme Court. JYom the Times. The applications for injunctions in behalf of Georgia and Mississippi, to restrain the opera tion of the Reconstruction net, were dismissed iy the Supreme Court, which disclaims juris diction in the premises. This result has been so generally expected that its promulgation is received as a matter of course. Before any action was taken, the inability of the Court to interfere was treated by all parties at the North as an established fact. If any doubts remained, they were pro bably dispelled by the argument of the Attorney-General. The lawyers had already declared the motion inadmissible, on grounds which seemed irrefragable. The Attorney General added to the subtlety of the lawyer the strong sense of the statesman, and con vinced the popular judgment of the undesira bleness of vesting in any Court the power of nullifying the political action of the Govern ment. The South, already disposed to comply with the terms of the act, will have its last remain ing scruples removed by thii decision. There is no evidence that the Southern people ever placed much reliance upon the appeal to the Supreme Judiciary. But prominent politicians Lave exhibited a contrary inclination, and have stood aloof even where they have not hindered, under a vague hope of judicial in terposition. The decision cuts the thread by which these hopes have been suspended. The chance of interference to arrest the operation tif tlie law is ended. And not only the States Gnreria and Mississippi, but the whole smith niav now realize the imperative char (later of the Congressional plan, which, will states, and, in a spirit not y; " 7 3 Billed, wished to press them, lhoir stand point is somewhat different from ours, and tiiMii ana nuuiio boiiu i THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA! WEDNESDAY, go forward without a possibility of judicial hindrance. It is fortunate that no needless delay has been perniittod by the Court, whose decision renders certain the coniploto and un restricted operation of the law as the basis of Southern reorganization. TJ Injunction r, Dlimiaaed Jeff. Uavla lrlad on Ball-A Clear Field for Bomhtru Reconstruction. V-Vom Vi Herald. The Supreme Court of tie United States has dismissed the Mississippi and Georgia injunction cases for want of jurisdiction. 15y the Circuit Court of the United States at Rich mond (Judge Underwood), Jeff. Davis, while awaiting his trial, has been released from mili tary custody on bail, in the sum of one hun dred thousand dollars. These are two im portant events, and will be bailed with general satisfaction throughout the country, in view of an uninterrupted reconstruction, and an early restoration to Congress of the ten ex cluded Southern States. The Mississippi aud Georgia cases were each a petition to the Supreme Court, restraining the Secretary of War, General Grant, and the live Southern Military District commanders (for an injunction in one case would apply to them all) from the execution of the Southern Reconstruction laws of Congress, on the ground that they are unconstitutional and void in trenching upon State rights. A de cision to this effect, looking to the Milligau decision of last winter, was reasonably ex pected by the petitioners (Sharkey, Walker, and others), and there was some reason to fear that President Johnson, in the eveut of such a decision, might obey it, in the recill of the Southern Military District comman ders, thus reinstating his own policy, and thus reinstating his challenging another conflict with Congress. which would inevitably end only in his im peachment and removal, aud in the reconstruc tion of the Supreme Court itself. It will be perceived, therefore, that in the dismissal of these injunction cases the conflict from which the President stands so signally defeated has been declined by the Supreme Court, and that by the Kxecutive and judicial departments the legislative is recognized the sovereign master of Southern reconstruction and restoration. Consequently, all those dis turbing State rights politicians of the South and the North who have been promising a rescue from Congress by the Supreme Court must now fall in with the good 'advice of Gene rals Lee, Hampton, Longstreet, and other late fighting Rebel leaders, in fulfilling the terms laid down by Congress. In behalf of Southern reconstruction, then, the importance and value of this decision cannot be exagge rated. Nor is the temporary enlargement of Jeff. Davis on bail a trilling matter, looking to a healthy reconstruction of Southern public opinion. Two years ago, on the charge of being a conspirator with Wilkes Booth and others in the assassination of President Lin coln, a reward of one hundred thousand dol lars was offered by President Johnson for the capture of Davis. That charge has long since fallen to the ground; but, from the quibbling evasions of Chief Justice Chase, the accused is detained in prison two years awaiting "a speedy trial," as a murderer, a traitor, or a Rebel. The law's delay, through the Chief Justice, is thus becoming a public scandal, when Davis is brought up for trial and re leased on bail in the very sum (one hundred thousand dollars) paid for his capture. This is a curious fact; but it is not half so curious as the fact that first on the list of his bonds men appears Horace Greeley ("on to Rich mond"), and second, Augustus Schell, Presi- ' dent of the Democratic Manhattan Club, of ! which Thurlow Weed is likewise a member. Here is Northern rivalry for political capital South, which may lead to still more remark able manifestations of brotherly love. It matters little now whether Davis is tried next week, next month, or next year his trial will end in smoke. It is not unlikely that if left to the courts his case may be postponed again and again, till finally dropped. In the John Brown song it is said, "We will hnnn JeH Davis on a sour apple tree, As we go marching on," and President Johnson has declared several times that "treason is a crime and traitors must be punished;" but as matters now stand the best thing he could do would be to grant a free pardon to Davis and let him go in peace. Thus, in this case, the work of reconstruc tion commenced by O'Conor, Greeley, and Schell will be perfected by the President, and Davis will become a tower of strength to the Government in the good cause of Southern ! restoration. Greeley will have a fair Held j throughout the South to rectify the blunders j of Senator Wilson, the Hon. Mr. Kelley, j Jedediah K. Hayward, and other Northern ! radicals, in their missionary efforts to array the Southern blacks against the whites as a j political party, and Davis will be able to I exercise a still greater influence over the I intractable State-rights politicians, in bring ing them round to the laws of Congress, and I over the five Southern Military District coin j ruanders. The great danger now is that, between the ideas of confiscation and agrari auism, which are getting into the heads of t.i. Southern blacks by the hints thrown out by 'Old Thad. Stevens," Senator Wilson, and others, on the one side, and from such South ern unreconstructed white leaders as ex- : Governor Perry of South Carolina, Sharkey of Mississippi, aud Governor Jenkins of Georgia, on uie oilier siue, mere may be organized such a clashing of races as will precipitate even in the North another political revolution, throwing everything into contusion, while yet the work of reconstruction is only half begun. To arrest these tendencies of the present political agitations of our live Southern Mili tary Districts, we submit to President Johnson the experiment of a free pardon to Davis, in rder that he and Greeley, and Aucustus Schell and John Minor Botts, may stump the South together, in correcting the fallacies of State rights, and in disabusing the ignorant blacks of those dangerous notions that, in addition to freedom, the Preedman's Bureau, and the ballot-box, they are to have free farms and nothing to do but to enjoy all the African splendors of Hayti. The Republican leaders, at all events, must look to this, or they may soon find themselves in the midst of a North ern political revolution. Presidential Journeying. fYom the Tribune. Our great men are restless, moving, roam ing over the face of the earth. General Butler has been to the West, Senator Wilson is in the South, General Sherman is going to the Fast, and Mr. Seward has but recently returned from a strawberry picnic in Walrussia. Mr. Colfax has been to Utah, and is going to Michigan. Senator Sherman has gone to Europe, and Admiral Farragut is going; Judge Kelley has gone to New Orleans, and will travel thence North, and through the Rebel States. Mr. Andrew Johnson contem plates excursions to Boston aud to Charleston, P. C, and Mr. Jack Rogers, having lately loft Washington for New Jersey, has really done as much travelling as the publio hail a right to expect. A party of oui Congressmen are going to the plains to shoot buffalo that is, to shoot at buffalo, and Mr. English, of Con necticut, last month," by dint of labors hardly equalled by the pedestrian who made a thou sand miles in a thousand hours, actually travelled all the way from bis mills to the State capital. General Grant has not been very excursive lately, having had enough of travel when be went with the President to Springfield, but is not likely to spend the Hummer in idleness; and, indeed, the only great man who has not been journeying of late is Mr. Davis, and even he can now go where ho pleases. Rumor, which is sometimeR truth and some times calumny, intimates that all these jour neys, to whatever point of the compass they pretend, are really meant to he roundabout ways to Washington pilgrimages of Presiden tial candidates, who, alter long toil, finally hope to rest in the White. House. March 4 1809. ' ' "Sleep affer toll, port after stormy sens." And though no one was ever known to rest in that poorly defended citadel, forever besietrpd vy hi lines 01 omce-secKers, inese gentlemen mny not be dismayed by the fate of its present occupant. If travelling could secure an elec tion to the great office, there aro few Ameri cans who would not cheerfully walk to Jeru salem on foot, with peas in their shoes, or re peat the voyages of Captain Cook, or M. Du Chaillu's eight years in Africa. But railroads have made this method of canvassing for votes easy. A great man in these days can show himself to the people of every "state in the Union with more ease than Henry Clay, forty years ago, could canvass the hunting grounds 01 Kentucky. The great man spoke in Boston on Monday. spoke in New York yesterday, and speaks in 1 Lnlauelpma to-day, ana may reach New Orleans by the end of the week. Reputations wnicii tormerly were local are now universal. and national famo, or at least national noto riety, is 110 longer the slow growth of years, um iue liumeuiuie creation 01 me locomotive. J a I 1 -. ' vue newspaper, aim iue leiegrapu. INo man can speak one emphatic word that is not in stantly repeated by innumerable echoes from Maine to Louisiana. Ihe South sends her orators to Connecticut, the North pays the debt by sending Henry Wilson to Charleston It is natural, then, that the Presidential condi date should be like ( Jeorge Francis Train or Colorado Jewett a man with the world for his home, spending his life in steamboats and cars. No candidate will stay at home if he can help it. The candidates are all flitting, Hitting, and every day adds to the number. We do not know that all the gentlemen we have mentioned are Presidential candidates, but Rumor will have it that they are. Yet what political capital can Gen. Sherman make of a trip to the Holy Land ; what votes can the ambitious Congressman hope to secure by shooting at buffalo, and being shot at by Sioux and Cheyennes ; what good will it do Mr. Jack Rogers to go to Trenton, or Mr. Seward to Auburn, or where shall Mr. John son travel to find himself populr.r ? We do not see satisfactory answers to these questions, but Rumor in every man's pilgrimage finds profound mystery, and will have it that no body can pack his trunk and buy a railroad ticket without having desighs on the Presi dential succession. Some of the distinguished gentlemen we have mentioned, who exchange the safety of home for the perils of the railroad, have indeed about one chance of the Presidency to ninety nine of a collision or an explosion, and travel may teach them this truth. A far better result than the mere making of a President may come from these joumeyings. If the people learn to know the leaders, the leaders are taught by the people. No man can travel far and intelli gently observe without discovering that the almost universal sentiment demands the speedy reconstruction of the Southern States. The responsibility of success is weighty, and it rests upon the North. We have placed ten States under military rule; we have prescribed the qualifications of voters, and given the ballot to hundreds of thousands who never before possessed it. WTe have begun the ex periment, and must watch it till the end. Upon all our public men, therefore, we urge cooperation in the work of reconstruction, aud securing all rights for all men. Whether it is to the Kast, West, North, or South that they turn their steps, let them not forget that the great work before us is not the making of a President, but the restoration of the country. Let us all join hands in that work, and the Presidential question will come soon enough. The Bloody Policy of Juarez. From the Times. We should think that President Juarez might have learned by this time the impolicy, to say the least, of the bloody course he lias been pursuing towards the Imperialists who have fallen into bis hands. Yet we learn that the Juarist General who is besieging the capital proposes to carry out the system that has lately been put in execution against Maximilian's upholders in all other parts of Mexico. When asked for terms of capitulation, he replied that no quarter would be granted to certain officers whom he desig nated; and there is no doubt, judging by re cent events, that, in case of the capture of the city, the list of the doomed will be extended indefinitely. It is to this bloody policy and we call it a policy because of the uniformity of its applica tionthat we attribute the sluw progress and small success of the Juarist Government since the departure of the French troops. When Napoleon's army departed for France at the beginning of the year, and Maximilian was'left without any supporters save such as he could find among the Mexican people, it was uni versally believed that the empire could not stand for a month. This was the rminiou even at the Court of Austria, as appeared by the hasty application made to our Government for its friendly intercession in behalf of the uie ot Maximilian. 1 et Maximilian has maintained himself thus far throughout the year, and continues up to this time not only to hold the Liberal army at bay, but to retain possession of the principal seaport and the capital. The Juarest acents tell us constantly that they are just about to hang him; but it appears that thev have a good deal to do yet before they get hold of jjiuv is, mat an those who nave ever len his supporters are forced to hold out and light with desperation to the very last, for they know that the hour u'.Tr surrender insures them a bullet or a halter. We think our Government is called upon to give Juarez something like strong coun sel on this subject. Secretory Seward had not one-half the occasion to utter his remonstrance against French cruelty to ward the Liberal, that l. l, . .1,.,,. strate against Juarez's atrocitiea towards the Imperialists. Juarez ought to be made to unuersianu mat ail mankind hold bis bloody J'VUl' 111 UOI.CBIUI.1VU. The Ncgre Riot In Illrhmond and New Orleans. From the World. 1 3 ho slight llirentenlnt-n bik! lirelnnlniri of riot. In nichmoiid, on Huiurdiiv, do not Indicate serious Iron tile. There ncetus to nave been white men Id tlmt city who have rIvph the colored people bud counsel, which some of them nnve oeen ioomhii enough to take. Commuted wllh this local and pnrltHl disorder U the gene ral excellent and moderate behavior of the frecdnieu throughout the Mouth, by which they (should rightly be Jinked. Iribunt. In spite of the Tribune1 1 attempt to belittle the riots, authentic intelligence from Rich mond, makes it evident that a saturnalia of carnage is preveuted in that city only by the vigilance and alertness of United States troops. That the negroes need to be overawed and terrified is proved by the speeches made in the African Church, on Sunday night, by Judge Underwood and Horace Greeley. Judge Underwood warned them, by repeating what one of the generals had said to him during the day, namely, "that there was a possibility of a riot being made by the negroes to-morrow, and that if there was, he would plaut canuon and sweej) the streets with grape-shot." When the rabid and ribald Underwood finds it necessary to go into a negro church and utter such a warning, the volcano of riotous passions must be on the point of great erup tion. Mr. Greeley's speech, as reported, con sisted almost entirely in a dissuasion from riots. The fact that the 11th United States Infantry is to encamp permanently in the City Springs Park, within the city limits, shows the necessity which General Schofield thinks him self under, of using vigorous measures of re pression. Ihe arrest of the Massachusetts ladical, llayward, tor using incendiary lau puage, and the putting him under heavy bonds; the beating of policemen by negroes; the patrolling of the streets by mounted sol diers; the stationing of squads of policemen at all the churches on Sunday to protect the worshippers against negro outrages; and the excited threats made by the negro populace. are evidence of a most violent aud inflamma tory state of feeling. The contrast suggested by the Tribune be tween the conduct of the neerroes in the Southern cities and the great mass of them on the plantations, is instructive. It affords a correct clue to the cause of the riots. The negroes on the plantations come into contact only with Southern whites, and reports from all parts of the South concur in showing that in tne rural uisincis me ireeamen are in creasingly orderly and iudustrious, and that there is a gratifying friendliness of sentiment between the two races. Why is it different in New Orleans and Richmond? For no other reason man because in me cities the raving and incendiary radicals have an easy access to the negroes, and are exerting all their energy and ingenuity to breed mischief. If the torch and-turpentine radicals would forbear to stir up strite, the great problem of Southern society would solve itself in a peaceful, orderly. traternai manner. These plotters of disorder refuse to let the South alone because it is apparent that, if things are left to take their course, the freed- men will recognize the identity of interests between themselves aud their section, and that their vote will not go to strengthen the Republican party. Perpetual discord and dis sensions between me two races is necessary to enable that party to reap the crop which it has sown. When the radicals find that though the freedmen vote, ther are not likely to vote with them, they begin to conclude that their advocacy of negro suffrage was a politi cal blunder, unless they can detach the negroes from the Southern whites. The South will have a larger representation in Congress aud more power in the government in consequence of emancipation. Unless, therefore, the bouth can he divided, and the negroes organized as a wing of the Republican party, the radicals have been fabricating a weapon for their own destruc tion. It is for this reason that they are making desperate efforts to array race against race. In lnllaming the passions oJ the negroes up to the point of riotous outbreaks, the more considerate and crafty radicals are sensi ble that they have overshot the mark. It is their policy to foster hatred, but to make it run only in the political channels. The in stigation of riots and the inauguration of a war of races tend to a recoil which will bring the party into odium. Hence the energy with which the rascally Judge Underwood, whose intimated charge so powertully stimulated the present dangerous state of feeling, is exerting himself to prevent an eruption of negro violence. MILLINERY. TRIMMINGS, ETC. OURNI N MILLINERY. ALWAYS ON HAND A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF MOUKNING UOIVJNETas, AT AO. 904 WALK ITT STREET. S27fui MAD'LLE KEOCH. MKS. II. DILLON, AOS. Hits AND 831 MOUTH MTI1EET, Has a handsome assortment of SFKINU MILLI tN.hl. i nines', Misses', and children's Straw and fancy Bonn is and iiuts ot tne luteal sty lea. Alxo. bilks, Velvets, Klhbons, Crupoa, Feathers, Flowers, irames, etc 7 1J FURNISHING GOODS, SHIRTS.&C. Pa HOFFMANN, JR.. NO, 835 AltCII sTBEET, FUENISHING GOODS, (LateO. A. Doflman. formerly W. W. Knight,) MAE fclUUTM AND WRAPPER. 1IOMEHV AMD ULOVEs fcIEU,EA91KV WOOL. AAD MERINO KMmwmu fJADERCEOTIIIWO. J V. SCOTT & CO., SHIRT MANUFACTURERS, AND DKALKKB 1M M EN'S FUUNiailINQ GOODS, Mo. 814 CIIENNUT ftTHEKT, iOL'R LOUWJ BiXOYV TBJ "UUHTinaj iajj p ATENT SHOULDER-SEAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY, AND ENTEEMEN' FURNJIIIN WHTOBB Mikf'KCT FITTING SH1KT8 AND DHAWK1US All other arncle. oi OH.Nllih.nl n.l o DKXbb (.OUDb in lull variety. W INCHESTER A CO,, No. 7IK) CHKSNDT Htreet. Ill) HARD KUBBEH ARTIFICIAL L1MBH. Arms, Legs, Appliances for . lietormlly, etc etc. Thenta Limha are 1 transierrea irour me- 111 iuriu aiiu uvt are the llfc-hieui., most auraoie, com fortable, perteel, and artistic substi tutes yet Invented. They are ap- States Government and our principal burgeon Patented Aufc-usl 18, lut; May U lt: Way 1. un Add reus KIMBALL & (X)., No. 639 AXJU btreet rtilladelphla, Pamphlet tree, t 27 01a tirovea ana auoiitea oy tun umiea MAY 15, 1807. DRY GOODS. PRICE & WOOD. Jt. W, rOKHKR F.IOIITH m ' HATE JUNT OPES ED A new lot of White Piques, SO. 60. 65, 78, 80 centa, and (l.er Br.l. ... ..-Mu. 1HJU yarns rmm r.i'n mwr.ni. JlHiioRome l'lald NBlimnuk MubIIub. Sou tlnMi iBnibrlm. JhconMn, and Nainsooks. hwlH Mull and Vlciorm l awns. Handsome MarsuUles Qui IK), etc. etc MNH UOOBftl lil MEN OOI)11 Khip Quality Bird-eye Diaper, Jr. cents prr yar. . 1, "en 1'owi-ls, UK 1 " 60 cents. K'Lli'li 1 liil er, ! the vlece, very cbeap. llisi MakcsMiiriiDK i.iiiriin. ,. 8-4 rower-loom Table Uutus, 62X.7S, 0 cents, and J1IPIICIHM1 IHIlin 1.1111:110..' .t.- - tM lilem-hf d Tulile Miipiih, B0 centa per yard. Llueii JSupklua and Doylies. Ml ttl.IKM 911'MLIXN! Ilcst makes Blenched aod Unbleached Muslins at the very lowest market prices. Calicoes, ihhi colors. iL:t. m. ifva. Aueilculi and hcoicli Ulimlmnis. A cheap lot ot BlRck Alpiu:s, Irom auction. KlneUUttllty Colored Alpacas. Ha-n I'olored All-wool Dela.lr.es. ritild bilk roi liu. (I per Jard. 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Yam-wide boring Calicoes, 25 cents. Bargains in liuckaback Liueu Towels, 28 cents. WHITE UOODM white uoous: Soft finish Jaconeta, 25, and 50 centa. Victoria Lawns, 81, 45 5t, aud 6U cents. Nuiusouks.UndreitHed Cambrics, Swiss, etc. bl.lrieil Muslins, hue white Brilliants, etc. Plaid Nainsooks, 25, si, 7,, 5u, 65, tk, aud oo cents. W lilie Piques, from auction, 5o cents. Fine Corded Piques. 62), and 76 cents. l.udles' and dents' Linen Udkls., Irom auction, Hobiery and Uloves.at reduced prices. Linen Shirt Fronts, mi, b7t, 45, 50, 56, 62i, and 75C. Tbree-piy Linen Cull's, li cents Marseilles Quilts from auction, cheap, etc. FARIES & WARNER, t2J NO. 329 NORTH NINTH STREET. No. 1101 CHESNUT Street, E. M. NEEDLES & CO.. AT THEIR 3NEW STORE, H.W. Corner Eleventh and Chcinut WILL OPEN ON WEDNESDAY MATT 1, BLACK THREAD LACE SHAWLS. BLACK LLAMA LACE BHAWL9, WHITE LLAMA LACE SHAWLS, Of entirely new designs, at LOW PRICES. U!S xcinhmh: lull 'oj NDIA SHAW LS. GEORGE FRYER, No. 916 CHESNUT STREET, HAVING A LARGE STOCK OF INDIA. SHAWLS On band, will oO'er them for the next three weeks at greatly reduced prices, less than ever oll'ered before. 1 18 8m Ladles in want oi this article will do well to pur chase now, as great Inducements will be offered. . ft -A0. S. W. Corner of XVrartli and Avail 8 to HAVE THEIR SECOND OPENING OF SPRING GOODS TO-DAY. NEW CIIEWE DREW MII.KH. NEW FEA1D AKUWBlPi; SII.KS, Srll.U tOMMtN fl.AIN sll,li(t. rlS.MAIIK AN1 AMHKIt !.! NIEKS. 1lI.MlltiNT NEW ORfcANOIKW. Il,AIN FAHHICN, t'OII EA lUt.m' HVtTH. 1.EA9IA LAI'K AMIPlsHEU COINTM. WHITE EEAJIA AND UREMADISE PIRKHlilirF! BAREOE flliWH. MI-KINO KHAWEN. OUR ORDER! NO. N. R. II ROCHE MPAIIEH A WEM WITH THE EKINOK ON A EE HUH K I !), M AH1.KT AND REACH. CENTRES, 1NIUA fc'I T EE. 8 6 wfmdin N I N C . CLOAK NEW CLOAK STOUE, NO. 818 ARCH STREET, Between Eighth end Ninth Streets, South Side. The latest Spring Styles, In every quality ol Cloth, at very low prices. Ladles In search ot NEW SPRING SACQCE9 should nspect our designs and assortment betore purchasing elsewhere. DAVIN' NEW STORE, THE ARCH STREET CLOAK EMPORIUM, 8 lBmwfgm No. 81 S ARCH Street. CHKAP DRY GOO 18, CARPETS, MATTINGS, OIL CLOTHS, AND WLNDOW SHADES, V. E. ARCHAMBAULT, N. E. Corner ELEVENTH and MARKET Streets, opened this tuornluK, front auction luvraln Carpets, all wool, at 75c., 87c, fl, 1'2S, tr87, and fl'M). inn rain carpets, wool tilling, uc, 6uc and 2c. English Tapestry Brussels Carpets, only l-76. Entry and btalr Carpets, 25c. to 75c, Rag Carpets, c to 76c. Hemp Carpets, 86c to ffje. Floor Oil Cloths, 6uc. Window t-luules, i u fx Plain Window Hoi lnud, Nic. White Matting, 87c, to 6oc Red Matting, 4'ic. to 60c. Woollen Druggets, fl to HTW. hllr O t'lotlis, 26c. Spring Chintzes, 12c. to 20C, DeLalnes toe. Muslins, llo. to 2nc. CHKAP STORK, f2 196m N. F. Corner F1KVKNTH and MARKET Streets. A LL-WOOL BLANKETS. 6 lb. Oil KEN ENDS. 25 BALKS WHITE AND GREY. iull SALE Ul nKNEOUIrxoUt 6 6inwf0l No. 16 HANK btreeu DRY GOODS. JAMES r.rrlULLAN, SUCCESSOR TO J. V. COWELL & SON, HAS IN STOCK AND RECEIV1NU DAILY A LA HUE SUI'FLY OF HCUSE-FUCKISHIMG DRY G02DS. The facilities he has for supplying his customers with the BEST GOODS at Uie LOWEST KATE art unsurpassed. He has now a full line ot LINEN SHEETINGS, at reduced prices. A loo, PILLOW-CASE LIN KNJi. TAI1LK CLOTHS AND NAPKINS. TABLE DAMASK by the yard. TOWELS AND TOWELLING by the yard. MAIUSEILLKH. LANCASTER, HONEYCOMB and ALLENDALE QUILTS. FLANNELS, greatly reduced In price. SHEETING AND SHIRTING MUSLINS. FURNITURE CHINTZES AND DIMITIES. PIANO AND TABLE COVERS. TOILANKT by tlieyard. WHITE GOODS CELLING OFF CHEAP. RICHARDSON'S LINENS always a specialty. y All goods warranted to be what they are sold tor. at the au smitUm H. W. COR. JEVETH AND CIlr.HNUT. 1H07!!I AN ATTRACTIVE CORNER! REACH! EE IIIEAT! w EEEUANT OOOD9I PRICES) EOWI We have pleasure In saying tuat we are able to ofTor an unusually attractive aud elegant STOCK OK OOODti, aud at PRICES DECIDEDLY CHEAP. RICH HEAVY REACH NILUN. MOHAIR, EEITHEN, POIEIN. SHETLAND Nil A WES FOB 3. PIANO AND MEEODEON COVER. CEOTHN, CAMNIMEREN, AND DRILLS. RENT HOOP NHIRTM, AEE MIZKN. 1,1 N EN UOOEM, A1CNE1NN, FLAN N ELY, ETC. ETC All goods sold at the very lowest nosslbleiprlces.and warranted as represented. JOSEPH H. THORNLEY N. E. CORNER EIOIITH AND MPRINO ttARDEN STREETS). Established In IBM. 3 1 Smsp RE-OPENING OP "New Mourning Store." This Store has Just been opened with a well-eelecte STOCK OF . , MOURNING GOODS, AT POPULAR PRICES. Also, the largest aud handsomest assortment ol MOIRNINU MILLINERY, Ever offered in this city, manufactured exp ressly tor this establishment. NO. 1113 CHESNUT STREET, "OIRAKD ROW.' A. BITERS, Lately of New York S 22 f mw2m J. CHAMBERS, NO. H10 ARCH STREET. Novelties Opening Dally, ileal ciuuy iaceo. Black Ouipure Laces. Potnie Appiuiue Laces, Pointe de Uaze Laces. Thread Veils trom 2'50. WHITE GOODS. Marseilles tor Dresses Bargains, French Muslins, 2 yards wide, at ) cents. Shirred aud Tucked Lace MuhIIus; India Twilled Long Cloth ; Plaid, Mrlpe, and Plain Nainsooks; sort Cuimi Cambric, lh yard wide ; Cambric Edgings and Insertions. new desiuP very cheap. 681m INSTRUCTION. BUSINESS COLLEGE, Bf. E. CORNER FIFTH AND CHESNCT STS Established Nov. 2, 1861. Chartered March 14, 1815. ROOK-KEEPINU. Course of Instruction uneauailed, consisting of prac tical metbods actually employed In leading houses I this and other cities, a Illustrated In I'alroauks' Book-keeping, which is the text-book ot thla Institu tion. OTHER It HAN CUES. Telegraphing, CummeruM Calculations, Business niiQ OriiHiiieutuI Writing, the Higher Mui hematics, Correspondence, Forms, Commercial Law, etc, YOUNG 91 EN Invited to visit the Institution and Judge or them, selves ol its superior appointments. Circulars ou ap plication. L. KAIKBANK.O, A. M., President. T. K. Mkrchant. Secretary. THE GREAT NATIONAL TELEGRAPHIC AND COMMERCIAL INSTITUTE, No. 710 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA, 'J tils Institution Is now open lor Educational pur. popes. The outlit Is perlevt lurullure throughout being entirely new. THE TEEEORAPHIC DEPARTMENT Is under the control of Air. Park Spring, who asat most complete aud thorough operator, Is unqualifiedly endorsed by the entire corps of managers of tba "Western Union Telegraphic line at the muiu oillce In this city. Twenty-one instruments in constant opera, lion. THE EADIEM' TEEF.ORAPHIC DEPART. H EN T, In comfort and elegance.eguals any Drawing-room In the city. Opportunities lor study are here atlordod that are unequalled. THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT Is nuder the especial care of Mr. T. C. Search, an ex poilenced accoumuut, aud late Professor or Accounts In u prominent Busim sj College of this City. A full corps of Teachers always In attendance. , UN PARALLELED OFFER. Wewlllrefuud the entire charge ol tuition to anv pupil who may be dlssutislled with our Instruction alter having given two weeks' faithful labor In elthiie Department. UM KEND FOR CIRCULAR. TERMS PREVIOUS TO MARCH 1. 1887. Full Course, time unlimited ' ' ... Telegraphing, three mouths J0 Positions Ouaraulei-d. "'' 1 Day and Evening Instruction. Ill mwf Sm JACOB 11. TAYLOR. P.Msn. WOOD CXJALrKrV,""". KKEX city at fi-to p. Each ot the feat HutlstHi-tl. City at -60 l.eVCn; supr,(,7iEHVl r" " No. 1 H H. 1 mm ZtZLZ. V" "".trJ'ed INUTON Avenue. wuu,no.uii WAHb